Although modest in size due to the exceptional beauty and harmony of all the architectural elements and perfect proportions, the mosque is seen as a monument. Within Ali-Pasha mosque, there is a large cemetery where the tomb of Ali-Pasha, but his tombstone does not have the inscription. In the harem of the mosque it was built fountain.

Čekreči Muslihudin Mosque is the oldest surviving, existing and domed mosque in Sarajevo. Its uniqueness is reflected in the slim stone minaret, which is not built onto the mosque, but its base is fully built into the southwest wall, so that it enters into with the upper level of the mosques which is called mahfil.

The mosques is completely surrounded by small shops (traditional handcrafts shops), which is endowed by Čekrekči Muslihuddin, the mosque has no harem with tombstones.

Built by the renowned architect of the Ottoman period, Mimar Sinan, it is a key landmark of Sarajevo. The Mosques was built in 1532 AD with the support of the then governor of Bosnia, Gazi-Husrev-beg. It is a great work of Ottomon architecture by Mimar Sinan, who went on to build the famous Selimiye Mosque in Turkey. The masjid has been now renovated after the heavy damage during the siege of Sarajevo.